The AR-15 Is Different: What I Learned Treating Parkland Victims – The Atlantic

Heather Sher is a radiologist in a hospital trauma center with 13 years of experience reading scans.  She makes the point that gunshot wounds from handguns leave the kind of damage behind that requires either skill or unlucky chance to kill someone.  It’s not just the number of shots per second that are at issue in the debate on access to guns.  High-velocity bullets shot from an AR-15 create a much broader swathe of damage in its path, increasing lethality significantly, and, as she states leaving “nothing left to repair, and utterly, devastatingly, nothing that could be done to fix the problem. ”

Read it, if you can.  

The AR-15 Is Different: What I Learned Treating Parkland Victims – The Atlantic

On Protests, Arming Teachers, and What Schools Really Need

There is already the disproportionate and overly aggressive disciplining of Black children in schools by administrators and violently by SROs who are positioned there. Like many people of color, I can immediately bring to mind racist teachers I had in high school so imagining them with a weapon is terrifying. As an administrator, I can attest to the biased discipline I witnessed that was harmful to Black students.

We’ve already seen a Black girl being dragged from a desk at Spring Valley High School in South Carolina when she refused to hand over her cell phone. The ensuing discussions revolved, sickly, around why people thought she deserved it. Adding guns to the mix for classroom teachers doesn’t inspire confidence. The Justice Policy Institute has already made a case against police in schools and many students from marginalized populations would be the first to agree with it based on their experiences…

I’m beyond glad that George and Amal Clooney, Oprah Winfrey, and others signed on to donate half a million dollars each to the organizing students from Parkland, Florida. Yet, there is another sneaking suspicion I have about this same kind of support for the Movement for Black Lives that was either absent or not at all on the same scale. Here’s the tough part: Black families know that the results of these protests (which won’t be described as “riots” like in Baltimore or Ferguson or a number of other places) will likely not be in policies that protect them or their children.

The suggestions for combatting these massacres have been to build schools as if combat would take place, inserting bullet-proof doors and metal detectors, arming teachers or hiring retired military personnel and all kinds of things that require an enormous amount of money. Where is this money when schools ask for fully funded institutions or when teachers reach into their own pockets to the tune of several hundred dollars per year? These magical, non-existant funds would be well spent on providing more trained teachers, support staff, social workers, school psychologists to say nothing of innovative technology for students and, you know, things we need to educate likecurriculum and textbooks and other materials.

Even better, let’s investigate this toxic whiteness and reflect on the biases that the more than 80% white teachers bring into public school systems daily. It’s uncomfortable to ask, but how exactly will arming those who are supposed to educate children affect Black students given their racial bias? How long before a teacher feels the need to make use of Stand Your Ground while on a school campus? Let’s demonstrate evidence that we’re responding to the years of Office of Civil Rights data that shows us the disparities in the education of our Black children. Let’s put money there, too. This is a both/and situation. We don’t have to put our issues in a silo to deal with them separately. We can work on ensuring that, God forbid, teachers who would be required to be armed in school settings that the lens brings to mind that some of those teachers are Black and get shot disproportionately inside and outside the schools.

On Protests, Arming Teachers, and What Schools Really Need

We Don’t Talk About Season 6, but LJ Fandom Sure Did

justanotheridijiton:

Last night on twitter  @neven-ebrez said, “I wasn’t in the fandom for Season 6 live watching.  I wonder how people interpreted early season Sam there, since he was soulless, but this was unknown to the audience.  I remember knowing something was wrong but I was just waiting on the show to explain what.” [Tweet]

Challenge accepted!

Repeating @k-vichanhttp://spnnewsletter.livejournal.com and https://spn-heavymeta.livejournal.com/ are gold mines of old fandom content: just go to http://supernaturalwiki.com for the date a episode first aired, and then go to the spnnewsletter/spn-heavymeta archive, select that date, and presume content will be posted over the next week or two for that episode.

This link dump of picspam recaps, reviews, meta, and speculation covers the first seven episodes of season six.

Unfortunately, because of Photobucket ransoming, a lot of old general meta (i.e. cinematography, production design, props) is effectively gone forever.

Keep reading

ameliacareful:

denugis:

eruthiawenluin:

themegalosaurus:

samiferal:

OKay for real people are always like “love a character AND THEIR FLAWS”, “bless you if you can see your fave is problematic”, blabla but?? I literally cannot see any flaws in Sam Winchester he is completely and utterly perfect to me? ??

This is a serious question someone tell me what flaws Sam could possibly have?

# I don’t want to blindly glorify him but he’s really not giving me much of a choice

*racks brain* well he makes some bad fashion choices

… but that’s pretty much all I got

That is hardly a flaw

I enjoy discussions both serious and frivolous about Sam’s flaws, and I welcome differences of opinion in good faith, but classifying the beautiful, the classic, the universally beloved purple dog shirt among Sam’s fashion crimes is just WRONG.

That was a fashion choice so transcendently good that it absolves all Sam’s fashion sins past, present, and to come.

Must disagree. Wonderful as the purple dog shirt is, and as heavily metaphorical and symbolic as the rusty bacon shirt has shown itself to be, that first shirt is such a monstrosity that if any normal human wore it, it would be ghastly. I mean, on a normal person, H. P. Lovecraft levels of horror.

Let us lay that at the feet of Sam Winchester. And thank Chuck that he seems to have retreated to the moral high ground of generic plaid.

Nooooooooo.  I like that first shirt, and the meta that accompanies it.  Okay, well, and also the fact that it is woven so the fabric has no give and it doesn’t open up all the way so…. you  know… there might be a contortion or two involved in putting it on, or, you know, taking it off.